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Journal of the American College of Cardiology 1987-Dec

Intracoronary ethyl alcohol or phenol injection ablates aconitine-induced ventricular tachycardia in dogs.

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H Inoue
B F Waller
D P Zipes

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Abstract

The hypothesis whether localized ventricular tachycardia could be ablated by myocardial necrosis induced with chemical agents injected into a coronary artery was tested. In 59 anesthetized dogs, a diagonal branch of the left anterior descending coronary artery was cannulated either occlusively or nonocclusively. Localized ventricular tachycardia was induced by injecting approximately 0.01 ml of 30 micrograms/ml of aconitine solution into the left ventricular wall perfused by the cannulated diagonal branch in 54 dogs. In eight untreated control dogs, aconitine-induced ventricular tachycardia lasted 10.2 +/- 2.3 minutes or degenerated into ventricular fibrillation after 7.0 +/- 4.0 minutes. In the remaining 46 dogs, 1 ml of saline solution, 25, 50 or 100% ethyl alcohol or 0.94 ml (mean [range 0.4 to 2.0]) of 25% phenol at room temperature was injected into the occluded coronary artery and 1 ml of 100% ethyl alcohol at body temperature was injected into the nonoccluded coronary artery. Ventricular tachycardia was eliminated in 9 (82%) of 11 dogs receiving phenol, 7 (88%) of 8 dogs receiving 100% ethyl alcohol occlusively, 6 (75%) of 8 dogs receiving 100% ethyl alcohol nonocclusively and 6 (67%) of 9 dogs receiving 50% ethyl alcohol for an entire follow-up period of 10 to 60 minutes. However, saline solution and 25% ethyl alcohol suppressed ventricular tachycardia only transiently in 8 (53%) of 15 and 3 (60%) of 5 dogs, respectively. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure rose from 8.0 to 11.2 mm Hg (p less than 0.05) immediately after injection of 100% ethyl alcohol in seven dogs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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